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Dark web market owner arrested in New York after FBI traces crypto

The FBI claimed it found Incognito Market’s alleged owner, Rui-Siang Lin, by tracking crypto from the dark web drug market to a crypto exchange account allegedly in his name.

A 23-year-old man has been arrested in New York and charged with owning, running and profiting from a $100 million dark web narcotics marketplace after authorities claimed to have tracked crypto transfers that uncovered his real identity.

Rui-Siang Lin, known online as “Pharoah,” was arrested at New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport on May 18 and appeared in federal court on Monday, May 20, the Manhattan United States Attorney’s Office wrote in a statement.

“For nearly four years, Rui-Siang Lin allegedly operated ‘Incognito Market,’ one of the largest online platforms for narcotics sales, conducting $100 million in illicit narcotics transactions and reaping millions of dollars in personal profits,” added FBI Assistant Director in Charge James Smith.

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US Treasury sanctions crypto wallets as authorities crack down on fentanyl

According to Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo, the sanctioned wallets "received millions of USD funds over hundreds of deposits" used for illicit drugs.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the United States Department of the Treasury has sanctioned crypto wallets allegedly connected to individuals and companies involved in the production of fentanyl.

In an Oct. 3 notice, the U.S. Justice Department announced indictments against several China-based chemical manufacturers as well as many of their employees, who allegedly used crypto transactions as part of an illegal fentanyl precursor distribution scheme. According to the U.S. authorities, the companies “tend to use cryptocurrency transactions to conceal their identities and the location and movement of their funds”, identifying at least 3 individuals who held crypto wallets for payments.

OFAC added wallets for Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), USD Coin (USDC), Tether (USDT) and Tron (TRX) connected to Chinese nationals and Valerian Labs to its list of Specially Designated Nationals along with companies including Hanhong Pharmaceutical Technology and Hebei Crovell Biotech. According to Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo, the enforcement action was aimed at disrupting an illicit drug network.

‘[W]e have identified and blocked over a dozen virtual currency wallets associated with these actors,” said Adeyemo. “The blocked wallets, which received millions of USD funds over hundreds of deposits, illustrate the scope and scale of the operation targeted today.”

Related: Crypto and psychedelics: Clarifying regulations could help industries grow

Many lawmakers have urged action on cracking down on the distribution of fentanyl in the United States, where the drug was estimated to be responsible for more than 67,000 deaths in 2021. Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren — an outspoken critic of digital assets — called out potential links between crypto payments and drug trafficking in a May hearing.

The first week in October also marked the 10th year in prison for Ross Ulbricht, the founder of the online marketplace Silk Road. Many criticized the platform for facilitating the drug trade by allowing payments with digital assets, but Ulbricht still has his supporters in the crypto space.

Magazine: US enforcement agencies are turning up the heat on crypto-related crime

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US Treasury sanctions Ethereum wallet tied to cartel over ‘illicit fentanyl trafficking’

An ETH wallet tied to Mexican national Mario Alberto Jimenez Castro was allegedly used for illicit fentanyl sales in the United States.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the United States Department of the Treasury has added a crypto wallet allegedly connected to a major international crime syndicate to its list of Specially Designated Nationals.

In a Sept. 26 announcement, the U.S. Treasury said it had sanctioned 10 individuals, including many tied to the Sinaloa Cartel. Among those added was Mexican national Mario Alberto Jimenez Castro through an Ethereum wallet.

‘[Jimenez Castro] reports directly to a Chapitos deputy and operates a money laundering organization that uses virtual currency and wire transfers, among other methods, to transfer proceeds from illicit fentanyl sales in the United States to Sinaloa Cartel leaders in Mexico,” said Treasury. “Jimenez Castro has directed U.S.-based couriers to pick up cash in the United States and deposit it into various virtual currency wallets for payment directly to the Chapitos and for reinvestment in fentanyl production.”

According to data from Etherscan, the wallet had a balance of roughly 0.018 Ether (ETH) — $28.22 — at the time of publication, with the latest activity more than 200 days ago. No other wallet addresses were included in OFAC’s most recent sanctions, which the Treasury said were in response to “illicit fentanyl trafficking” affecting the crisis surrounding opioid use in the United States.

“Today’s actions show that Treasury and the Administration will continue to relentlessly target the criminal enterprises threatening international security and flooding our communities with fentanyl and other deadly drugs,” said Brian Nelson, under secretary of the Treasury for terrorism and financial intelligence.

Related: Sen. Elizabeth Warren points to crypto payments as facilitating fentanyl trade in China

The sanctions followed OFAC sanctioning individuals with ties to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The U.S. Treasury also cited Lazarus as part of its reasons for adding crypto mixer Tornado Cash to its list of Specially Designated Nationals in August 2022. U.S. authorities arrested Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm in August 2023 for charges related to money laundering and sanctions violations.

Many industry leaders and policymakers criticized the Treasury’s actions against Tornado Cash. Six individuals backed by crypto exchange Coinbase filed a lawsuit against Treasury over the sanctions, but in August, a judge largely sided with the U.S. government in a motion for summary judgment.

Magazine: Tornado Cash 2.0: The race to build safe and legal coin mixers

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Five US enforcement agencies form new digital currency anti-crime task force

The agencies have worked together for years, but now their joint efforts are official as they plan to ramp up activity.

A diverse group of United States enforcement agencies has made official its cooperation on crimes related to the darknet and digital currency with the announcement of the Darknet Marketplace and Digital Currency Crimes Task Force on June 20. The new organization will target “cryptocurrency-enabled crimes” such as drug trafficking, money laundering, theft of personal information and child exploitation.

Representatives of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Arizona, the Office for U.S. Attorneys, the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Postal Inspection Service signed a memorandum of understanding on the new task force last week.

Related: How the IRS seized $10B worth of crypto using blockchain analytics

The agencies have been working together since 2017 and have seen a rise in the use of cryptocurrency in that time. According to a statement:

“The Darknet Marketplace and Digital Currency Crimes Task Force’s mission is to disrupt and dismantle criminal organizations that exploit the appearance of anonymity on the darknet or use digital currency to facilitate criminal activities.”

Law enforcement worldwide has been forming specialized units for crypto-related enforcement. Interpol created a crypto crimes unit late last year. Police in Canadian cities have begun forming local task forces. The new task force will have an international reach, as the HSI has 93 overseas locations in 56 countries.

In the U.S., the Federal Bureau of Investigation formed a Virtual Asset Exploitation Unit in February that will work with the Justice Department National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team. The Securities and Exchange Commission nearly doubled its Cyber Unit last year as well.

Law enforcement has a lot to work with. Chainalysis estimated last year that over 4,000 crypto whales hold illegally obtained funds, and crypto phishing attacks increased by 40% that year. However, there is also evidence that law enforcement efforts are paying off.

Magazine: US enforcement agencies are turning up the heat on crypto-related crime

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Sen. Elizabeth Warren points to crypto payments as facilitating fentanyl trade in China

“The number of crypto transactions associated with Chinese fentanyl brokers increased by 450% just last year alone," said the Massachusetts senator, citing an Elliptic report.

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren has suggested a link between cryptocurrency payments and companies based in China that provided precursors for the opioid fentanyl.

In a May 31 hearing of the United States Senate Banking Committee on China, Warren pointed to a report from blockchain analytics firm Elliptic to suggest a connection between cryptocurrency and “illegal drug transactions” at Chinese companies. Elliptic reported on May 23 that 90% of roughly 90 China-based firms supplying fentanyl precursors were willing to accept payment in cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin (BTC).

“Crypto is supposedly banned in China,” said Warren, proceeding to cite data from the Elliptic report. “The number of crypto transactions associated with Chinese fentanyl brokers increased by 450% just last year alone.”

Elizabeth Rosenberg, assistant secretary for terrorist financing and financial crimes at the U.S. Treasury Department, told Warren that the drug brokers likely relied on the pseudonymous nature of crypto transactions for payments. Rosenberg confirmed Warren’s sentiment that crypto was one of the major payment methods for Chinese companies.

The Massachusetts senator said she planned to reintroduce legislation aimed at addressing some of the regulatory gaps affecting these payments to companies engaged in the illegal drug trade. Warren first introduced the Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act in 2022 and has suggested at earlier congressional hearings on crypto she was preparing to reintroduce the bill.

“Congress has talked about fentanyl long enough. We propose to do something to fight back.”

Related: ‘If a government bans drugs, it should also ban crypto’ — Belgium’s former finance minister

According to data from the National Institutes of Health, in 2021 there were more than 70,000 deaths involving the overdose of synthetic opioids such as fentanyl in the United States. One of the most high-profile platforms that often facilitated illegal drug transactions using crypto payments, Silk Road, was shut down in 2013 and its founder, Ross Ulbricht, was sentenced to life in prison.

Magazine: Cryptocurrency trading addiction: What to look out for and how it is treated

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Economist Paul Krugman Criticizes Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Opposition to Central Bank Digital Currency

Economist Paul Krugman Criticizes Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Opposition to Central Bank Digital CurrencyEconomist Paul Krugman questioned why Republican Florida governor Ron DeSantis opposes a central bank digital currency (CBDC) in a recent opinion editorial. Krugman suggested that DeSantis may be motivated by “general paranoia.” He speculated that DeSantis may be influenced by individuals who fear a digital currency could hinder “un-woke activities such as tax evasion and […]

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Crypto and psychedelics: Clarifying regulations could help industries grow

It’s a long road to federal legalization, but opposition to psychedelics is waning at the state level and Capitol Hill.

This year, investors are watching for big spikes in biotech companies working with psychedelics, especially as the once-controversial compounds return to the spotlight touting mental health benefits — and uniting lawmakers at the United States Capitol across party lines. 

The category’s future could make big legal gains in 2023, but due to the American government’s built-in checks and balances, even a Congress in agreement can’t shape drug policy alone.

In May 2022, New Jersey Democratic Senator Cory Booker and Hawaii Democratic Senator Brian Schatz co-published a letter imploring the National Institutes of Health and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to study the therapeutic use of psychedelics. By the end of the summer, Republican Representatives Matt Gaetz of Florida and Dan Crenshaw of Texas had also committed their support to the study of psychedelics.

By 2012, the FDA had already created the “Breakthrough Therapy Designation” (BTD), enabling researchers to administer trials of otherwise illegal drugs suspected to offer unexplored medical benefits. MDMA received its first BTD designation in 2017 and psilocybin in 2018. Oregon now allows psychotherapists to treat patients with psilocybin.

As lawmakers on either side of the aisle argue about psychedelics on the federal level — using their power to earmark funds for research — the persistent, unlikely bipartisan union is inspiring increasingly bullish sentiments among psychedelics firms and their investors.

Psychedelics in Congress

Don’t chalk it up to the “Age of Aquarius,” though. Aside from the potential healing benefits, it is support for veterans that drives cooperation around these drugs.

In July 2022, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez offered an amendment to the 2023 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that would require the Department of Defense to study psilocybin and MDMA, alongside cannabis, as alternatives for combat who have post-traumatic stress disorder, at least 6,000 of whom took their own lives in 2022 alone.

Ocasio-Cortez introducing the amendments before Congress. Source: C-SPAN

Navy veteran and House Representative Dan Crenshaw offered a nearly identical amendment to the NDAA, with his focus on the psychedelics ibogaine and 5-MeO-DMT instead. “They are, I would argue, kind of collaborative amendments in a way,” Ocasio-Cortez told Bloomberg, confirming her office had communicated with Crenshaw’s.

Crenshaw had previously voiced support for MDMA research at an August 2021 panel with Rick Doblin, the executive director at Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS), and Jon Lubecky, a veteran who’s benefitted from MDMA therapy.

MAPS was the first drug company to secure a BTD for MDMA, with the Bitcoin (BTC)-rich Pineapple Fund donating $5 million and helping raise $4 million more to support MAPS’ $26 million push. Meanwhile, Crenshaw voted against the psychedelics bills proposed by Ocasio-Cortez in 2019 and four days after his 2021 panel appearance.

When Crenshaw and Ocasio-Cortez joined forces for their collaborative amendments last summer, both amendments were passed by voice vote shortly after being presented. Lubecky said, “If AOC [Ocasio-Cortez] and Crenshaw can agree, it’s hard to fight against it.” The NDAA has passed the house and is at the debate stage in the Senate.

Recent: Tax strategies allow crypto investors to offset losses

Representative Matt Gaetz, who was serving on the House Armed Services Committee at the time, also presented an NDAA amendment identical to Ocasio-Cortez’s, which was silently shot down.

In November 2022, California Representative Lou Correa and Michigan Representative Jack Bergman upped the ante by forming the Congressional Psychedelics Advancing Clinical Treatments (PACT) caucus. PACT is a bipartisan think tank that will explore “how we as Congress can support further research into clinical applications,” Correa told Cointelegraph. PACT will not advocate for decriminalization.

“During my time in Sacramento, I met veterans who were calling for access to cannabis instead of being prescribed opioids to treat their visible and invisible wounds from the battlefield,” Correa recalled, adding:

“In my time working on cannabis, I’ve seen public opinion change dramatically as there is more and more research. With the promising, but still extremely limited research into clinical applications for psychedelics, this feels like a natural next step.”

That same month, Senators Booker and Rand Paul filed the Breakthrough Therapies Act, which would amend Nixon’s Controlled Substances Act for the first time since it was passed in 1970 by asking the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to reclassify current and future drugs the FDA has endowed with Breakthrough Therapy Designation from Schedule I to Schedule II.

The move intends to “streamline the registration process for breakthrough therapies currently restricted by outdated drug classifications,” Paul told Cointelegraph, adding that it will “make it easier for researchers to conduct studies that can lead to breakthrough therapies to treat patients battling serious and life-threatening conditions.”

Medical leaders

Dr. Rachel Yehuda has studied post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) for over 35 years as a researcher with the Mount Sinai-affiliated James J. Peters VA Medical Center. Since 2019, she has studied psychedelics’ potential in treating veterans suffering from the condition, even as MDMA and psilocybin remain Schedule I substances. In 2018, Yehuda met Doblin at Burning Man — just after the FDA granted MDMA with BTD. Other drug companies, including the Peter Thiel-backed Compass Pathways and the Usona Institute, have received a BTD since.

“What bothered me when I first heard about [psychedelic] treatment was not only that a psychedelic was being used, which made me gasp a little, but that there was a claim that one session and there’s a dramatic difference,” Yehuda told Cointelegraph, adding:

“I’ve heard a lot of people make a promise of a quick recovery from PTSD. It irked me a bit because PTSD is such a difficult condition to treat, particularly in combat veterans.”

Doblin, however, invited Yehuda to attend a week-long training in Israel where clinicians watched and discussed footage of MDMA treatments transpiring. “The people on the screen really did remind me of veterans at the VA,” she continued. “They looked like them; they talked like them; they had similar issues — especially the moral injury and a lot of the things that make PTSD so difficult to treat. I said to Rick Doblin, ‘why aren’t you doing this at the VA?’”

Therapists Marcela Ot'alora and Bruce Poulter demonstrate guided therapy with MDMA in a reenactment. Source: NPR

There was no protocol in place with the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to carry out such treatments with the safety of all parties ensured. It took a substantial effort, but Yehuda utilized her expertise and position to create a protocol. Now, she’s conducting a study, administering MDMA to 60 veterans over three eight-hour guided therapy sessions, with pre and post-care.

Further critics

Ross Ellenhorn and Dimitri Mugianis, two experts who co-founded the psychedelic retreat Cardera, recently pointed out that traditionally conservative entities like Thiel and the Mercer Foundation have also invested in psychedelics, bolstering bipartisan support for their research.

“Some researchers dream of finding a scientific basis for the hypothesis that psychedelics might help end intractable political conflict,” Ellenhorn and Mugianis wrote, wondering if this newfound coalition could be as benign as it seems. “Psychedelics can certainly increase openness — but this can be openness to Nazism, eco-fascism or UFO cults as well as to peace and love.”

Bioethics experts Arthur Caplan and Kenneth Moch have also asked if the Breakthrough Therapies Act can resolve delays in researching breakthrough therapies and if it still makes sense for the FDA and DEA to co-manage substance schedules.

“Could the FDA itself take on the oversight work to review how a Schedule I experimental medicine is being utilized and access is being controlled in a clinical experiment, or must the DEA provide a second level of review as historically has been the norm when it comes to Schedule I psychoactive drugs?” the duo asked. “We think the former is possible.”

“The only long-term solution,” Ellenhorn and Mugianis continued, “is to directly address and fix the regulatory complexity that increases the cost and delays the timeline for access to potentially beneficial therapies.”

It’s worth noting that psychedelics alone can’t eradicate depression, anxiety and trauma since the drugs don’t directly resolve those conditions’ causes.

The Center for the Science of Psychedelics at the University of California, Berkeley, emphasizes that despite more and more states legalizing psychedelics, these drugs “remain illegal federally, so the impact of new state laws will depend upon the federal government declining to prosecute cases involving these substances.” Comanche Native Americans and religious leaders from Brazil have led ongoing battles against the Senate — still a stalling ground even for cannabis reform — seeking legal exemptions for the use of psychedelics under religious acceptance for over a century.

Regulatory clarity is good for markets

With increasing legislation and attention from a diverse range of lawmakers and experts, psychedelics could receive regulatory clarity to help the market expand further.

Ballooning attention, funding and social acceptance since 2018 have helped psychedelic stocks rise rapidly, with some volatility. Though the whole sector is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 11.5% between 2021 and 2026, topping $6.4 billion by 2028, the hype appeared to hit its plateau in January 2021 before sliding to unforeseen lows starting in April 2022.

In this regard, the arc of psychedelics illustrated from a financial perspective echoes the historical volatility of cryptocurrency markets, particularly in reaction to inconsistent legal controls based on decades-old regulations for their respective sectors. Dips in psychedelics stocks relate to projections for when the waiting ends. Crypto has been moving since the start.

Still, many in the crypto industry have claimed that legislation will help it grow and that 2023 will be the year that firms finally get a solid set of ground rules from lawmakers.

Recent: State of play: Decentralized domain services reflect on industry progress

The fate of psychedelics, on the whole, however, is more than a tool for political or profit gains. Access to their healing power has a bearing on real people’s circumstances.

“A lot of public health issues have become pretty controversial or polarized,” Yehuda said. “How we respect the need for our veterans to heal following serving our country is something we can all get behind. And that’s just the beginning, the tip of the iceberg, because there’s so many people that can benefit from this. A lot of people have trauma and mental health conditions.”

“We’re having a moment,” she concluded. “To make that moment last, we want to have a pathway of doing really careful work — if these treatments are even half as good as we think they are, it’s gonna be a significant advance for veteran healthcare and for the healthcare of our society.”

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Spanish rehab center adds crypto trading addiction to services list

The rehabilitation center estimates that about 1% of cryptocurrency traders will develop an "extreme" addiction to crypto trading.

A luxury rehabilitation center in Spain has recently added services aimed at treating a relatively new kind of addiction — crypto trading.

The center, called “The Balance,” is a Switzerland-founded wellness center, with its main facility located on the Spanish island of Mallorca along with representations in Spain, London and Switzerland.

While it has been known to treat addiction ailments such as alcohol, drugs and behavioral health — it has now recently begun offering services aimed at combatting crypto trading addiction, according to a report from the BBC.

The Feb. 5 report revealed that one of the center’s clients reached out so that he could “wean off crypto” after reportedly pouring in $200,000 worth of crypto trades each week.

The treatment involves a four week stay — which comprises of therapy, massages and yoga. The bill can be upwards of $75,000.

In another part of the world, Castle Craig Hospital — a Scottish-based addiction rehabilitation clinic treating high-adrenaline crypto traders since 2018 — has seen over 100 clients come in with “dangerous” cryptocurrency problems.

Castle Craig’s rehabilitation facility. Source: Castle Craig.

In Asia, Diamond Rehabilitation — a Thailand-based wellness center operating since 2019 — has also added services dedicated to cryptocurrency addiction rehab and treatment.

The organization said it approaches rehab through the use of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Motivational Interviewing (MI) and Psychodynamic Theory (PT) as part of its comprehensive, multi-stage approach to help traders overcome their addiction.

Related: How to control stress and depression in a crypto winter

It is believed that the euphoric highs and crushing lows of the fast-paced, 24/7 cryptocurrency trading arena have brought in real demand for rehabilitation centers to offer services for trading addicts.

An article by Family Addiction Specialist estimates about 1% cryptocurrency traders will develop a severe pathological addiction, while 10% will experience other problems beyond that of a financial loss.

The 24/7 nature of crypto trading has caused many to constantly check price charts. Source: Family Addiction Specialist.

Data from cryptocurrency payments platform TripleA estimates that over 420 million people have traded cryptocurrencies. This could mean that at least 4.2 million people may be suitable for such services.

Symptoms of this addiction according to Family Addiction Specialist, includes constantly checking the prices online — particularly in the middle of the night.

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Uzbeki police get ‘how to seize crypto’ training from UN security org

Uzbekistan's law enforcers were educated on blockchain analysis topics and methods for seizing crypto.

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) organized a five-day training course on cryptocurrencies and Dark Web investigation for Uzbekistan's police and prosecution forces. The course is a part of OSCE’s consistent efforts to educate Central Asian law enforcers on the emerging technologies that criminals might abuse in a strategically important region for the global drug trade. 

As the official press release from Oct. 21 goes, representatives from the General Prosecutor’s Office, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the State Security Service attended the training from Oct. 17 to 21 to learn about the main concepts and key trends in the areas of internetworking, anonymity and encryption, cryptocurrencies, obfuscation techniques, Dark Web and the Tor networks.

The enforcers beca acquainted with methods for seizing cryptocurrency and blockchain analysis developed by the European Cybercrime Training and Education Group (ECTEG). The OSCE has even donated a new computer classroom dto the General Prosecutor’s Academy.

The course became the first national training in Uzbekistan delivered within the second phase of the “Capacity Building on Combating Cybercrime in Central Asia” extra-budgetary project, which is funded by the United States, Germany and the Republic of Korea. National training activities will continue across the region throughout 2022 and 2023.

In 2020, OSCE has also conducted a training program on crypto enforcement for Central Asian countries. Back then, the scope of participating enforcers was much larger, with representatives from Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Mongolia attending it in the city of Almaty.

Related: Armenia aims to position itself as a Bitcoin mining hub

In August, the government of Uzbekistan, which had previously made significant steps toward a moderate approach to crypto, restricted access to a number of large international crypto exchanges, including Binance, FTX and Huobi, due to accusations of unlicensed activity.

The OSCE is the world's largest regional security-oriented intergovernmental organization with observer status at the United Nations. Based in Vienna, it focuses on issues such as arms control, promotion of human rights, freedom of the press, and free and fair elections.

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Silk Road 2 Admin Forfeits $667,000 in Bitcoin to British Law Enforcement

Silk Road 2 Admin Forfeits 7,000 in Bitcoin to British Law EnforcementAccording to reports, the founder of the now-defunct Silk Road 2 marketplace has forfeited more than half-million dollars worth of bitcoin to British authorities. White’s Silk Road 2 admin handle was called “Cthulhu,” and he also dubbed himself as “DPR2.” Silk Road 2 Admin Thomas White Forfeits $667K in Bitcoin In April 2019, Bitcoin.com News […]

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